AUGSBURG, GERMANY—Live Science reports that more than 5,500 silver coins were unearthed in an old riverbed in southern Germany by Sebastian Gairhos of the Archaeological Service of the City of Augsburg. The coins are denarii minted in the Roman Empire between the first and third centuries A.D., according to Stefan Krmnicek of the University of Tübingen. “The place of hiding was probably washed away many centuries later by a flood of the Wertach River, scattering the coins in the river gravel,” Krmnicek said. He thinks the hoard was buried in the early third century, and that the location was likely chosen because it was near the city of Augusta Vindelicum, the capital of the Roman province of Raetia, and the Via Claudia Augusta. “We do not yet know why the hoard was deposited,” Krmnicek concluded. For more on the archaeology of Roman Germany, go to “The Road Almost Taken.”
Hoard of 1,800-Year-Old Silver Coins Discovered in Germany
News November 17, 2021
Recommended Articles
Digs & Discoveries November/December 2018
Beauty Endures
Off the Grid May/June 2024
Lixus, Morocco
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2024
Pompeian Politics
-
Features September/October 2021
Secret Rites of Samothrace
Reimagining the experience of initiation into an ancient Greek mystery cult
(© American Excavations Samothrace) -
Features September/October 2021
Searching for the Fisher Kings
In the waters of southern Florida, the creative Calusa people forged a mighty empire
(Merald Clark) -
Letter From Scotland September/October 2021
Land of the Picts
New excavations reveal the truth behind the legend of these fearsome northern warriors
(Courtesy The Northern Picts Project) -
Artifacts September/October 2021
Late Medieval Ring
(© Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales)